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"And when shall you move into the house?" inquired Prudence
"As soon as possible"
"Will you take your horses and carriage?"
"I shall take the whole house, and you can look after uerite was settled in her country house, and I was
installed at Point du Jour
Then began an existence which I shall have souerite could not break entirely with her former
habits, and, as the house was always en fete, all the women whom
she knew came to see her For a whole ht or ten people to ht down all the people she knew, and did the honours of the house
as if the house belonged to her
The duke's ine; but fro for a note for a thousand francs,
professedly on behalf of Marguerite You know I had won so; I therefore iuerite, and fearing lest she should require more than I
possessed, I borrowed at Paris a sum equal to that which I had already
borrowed and paid back I was then once more in possession of soher friends was a little moderated when she saw the